One of the laziest objections to alternative cosmology goes like this:
“Yes, maybe that process is possible, but it must be so rare that it cannot matter.”
That sentence sounds sensible only inside a finite-age mindset.
BFUT destroys it by changing the clock.
In a universe with a beginning and a limited age, rare events can often be dismissed. A process with very low probability may simply not have enough time to produce large consequences. But in an eternal universe, that logic collapses. The moment time becomes effectively unlimited, non-zero probability becomes a completely different kind of thing.
It becomes cosmologically decisive.
This is one of the deepest intellectual shifts inside BFUT, and many people underestimate how powerful it is. The theory does not always need to prove that a process is common. It often only needs to show that a process is physically possible and not strictly zero in probability. Once that threshold is crossed, eternity does the rest.
That is why BFUT can seriously entertain the possibility that matter may occasionally persist from quantum activity in a physically real substrate of space. Critics hear “rare” and think “irrelevant.” BFUT hears “rare” and asks, “Over what timescale?”
That is the right question.
Because in an eternal universe, the scale of time is so vast that the difference between improbable and impossible becomes everything. A tiny leak of persistence, repeated across immeasurable duration, can build a cosmological inventory. A small process, given enough time, becomes a great one.
This is not mystical. It is basic probabilistic reasoning applied honestly to cosmology.
And once you understand it, a remarkable thing happens: many ideas that sound weak inside the Big Bang framework suddenly become strong inside BFUT. Slow accumulation becomes plausible. Distributed emergence becomes plausible. Long-term filtering becomes plausible. Even the notion of a dark accumulation era before the first great luminous transition stops sounding speculative and starts sounding natural.
That is what the eternal universe does. It rescales the meaning of rarity.
This is also why BFUT is not merely a different story about the past. It is a different logic of possibility. It changes what counts as explanatory power. It changes what kinds of mechanisms deserve attention. It changes which objections still work and which ones secretly depend on a short cosmic clock.
In a short-lived universe, rare may mean irrelevant.
In an eternal universe, rare may mean inevitable.
And that single reversal opens the door to almost everything BFUT is trying to say.
Download the research paper: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19149786 (doi.org in Bing) Download the simulation code: https://zenodo.org/records/19124510 Watch the simulation work: https://vijayshankarsharma.com/